Sera from 75 patients with clinical type I allergy against dogs were investigated by means of immunoblotting using extracts prepared from dog hair/dander (CAN XI D) and saliva. In addition, selected sera were tested on extracts made of hair, skin, salivary glands (parotis and submandibularis), serum and liver. A 69-kD IgE-binding protein was identified in all extracts tested with an incidence of approximately 40% and shown to be dog albumin by means of inhibition experiments. In 96% of patients’ sera IgE antibodies reactive with a 19-kD and/or a 23-kD protein of the hair/dander extract (CAN XID) were observed. IgE binding to a 23-kD band was also detected in the hair and saliva extracts, but not in skin, salivary gland, serum and liver extracts. A 19-kD IgE-binding protein was strongly expressed in skin and to a lesser degree in saliva, but not in hair, serum and liver. Preincubation of patients sera with the hair extract and subsequent probing with the hair/dander extract (CAN XI D) inhibited IgE binding to the 23 kD protein whereas preincubation with the skin extract abolished IgE binding to the 19-kD protein. Using the hair/dander extract as inhibitor, IgE binding to the 19- and 23-kD proteins of saliva was abrogated. Thus it is concluded that the 23-kD protein is preferentially expressed in hair and saliva whereas the 19-kD protein is found in saliva and skin. Furthermore these two proteins are likely to represent immunologically independent major allergens.
The sera from 25 patients with clinical type I allergy against dogs were investigated by means of immunoblotting, using extracts of dog hair/dander, skin, hair, saliva, salivary gland, serum and liver. 96% of the patients’ sera showed IgE antibodies reactive with 19- and 23-kilodalton (kDa) proteins in the hair/dander extract. The 23-kDa IgE-binding protein was preferentially detected in the hair extract and saliva but not in skin, salivary gland, serum and liver extracts. The 19-kDa band was strongly expressed in skin, but not in hair, serum and liver. Inhibition experiments using the 23-kDa containing extract prepared from hair and the 19-kDa containing extract prepared from skin revealed that these two proteins are likely to be immunologically independent allergens.
SummaryTwenty-one immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV 1)-positive hemophilic patients were treated with Azidothymidine (AZT) for symptomatic HIV infection. The median observation period was 20.5 months.At 25 months the probability of survival was 82%, the probability of progression of disease from CDC III or IV C2 to IV C1 (AIDS) was 20% in patients on continuous AZT treatment and 50% in patients with intermption of treatment. Three patients developed severe leukopenia and 3 patients severe anemii during AZT treatment. In 1 patient a dose-dependent striking increase of transaminases during AZT treatment was observed. In 7 patients treatment was intermpted, in 1 patient because of anemia, in 1 because of pruritus and in 5 patients because of noncompliance.No signiticant changes in the consumption of clotting factor concentrates and number of bleeding episodes before and during AZT treatment were noted.We conclude, that both hematological and non-hematological side effects of AZT in HIV 1-infected hemophilic patientr ur. comparable to those seen in other risk groups . AzT does not increase the bleeding tendency in this patient group.
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